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      مشاهده مورد 
      •   صفحهٔ اصلی
      • نشریات انگلیسی
      • Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
      • Volume 12, Issue 8
      • مشاهده مورد
      •   صفحهٔ اصلی
      • نشریات انگلیسی
      • Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
      • Volume 12, Issue 8
      • مشاهده مورد
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      Impact of Income and Education on Drug Purchasing Decisions in Hong Kong Chinese Cancer Patients: a Pilot Study

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      چکیده
      Background: The affordability of diagnostic, preventive and therapeutic interventions is a global concern, particularly in the developing world. To clarify the educational and financial factors that influence purchasing decisions, we conducted a survey of Hong Kong cancer patients across a broad social spectrum. Methods: A questionnaire was designed to assess the effect of costs on purchasing decisions relating to six drug-related variables: efficacy, tolerability, convenience, safety, peer pressure, and uncertainty. Validation of the original 31-part survey resulted in a final set of 22 core questions that was administered to 51 consecutive oncology patients who were characterised in terms of varying household income and educational level. Results: Most respondents (87.6%) were Hong Kong-born or mainland Chinese. There was a strong correlation between household income and education. Demand for drug tolerability and safety was high and cost-inelastic across all educational and income groups. An unexpected finding was that patients from low-income/education households were keen to purchase costly medications (whether Western, or Chinese herbs) of reputed high efficacy, whereas patients from middle-income/-education backgrounds were more influenced by considerations of unreimbursed cost. Only the most affluent and well-educated patients valued overall survival above disease-free survival when making drug purchasing decisions; this cohort was also the least influenced by peer pressure, and the most willing to pay extra for drugs offering more convenience alone. Conclusion: Low-income/education Asian patients had paradoxically high expectations of costly drug interventions. Although larger studies addressing this issue are needed to confirm these conclusions, public education initiatives aimed at protecting low-income/education patients from exploitation or disappointment may be desirable.
      کلید واژگان
      Cost-efficacy
      decision analysis
      psycho-oncology
      cancer patients

      شماره نشریه
      8
      تاریخ نشر
      2011-08-01
      1390-05-10
      ناشر
      West Asia Organization for Cancer Prevention (WAOCP)

      شاپا
      1513-7368
      2476-762X
      URI
      http://journal.waocp.org/article_25843.html
      https://iranjournals.nlai.ir/handle/123456789/34285

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